Christmas Prime Rib: A Holiday Tradition at Our Table
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Some families do ham every year. Some do turkey again (even after Thanksgiving just took its victory lap). In our house, Christmas has a different smell in the air — low and slow beef roasting all afternoon, that warm “something special is happening today” feeling, and everybody drifting through the kitchen like they’re “just checking something” when really they’re scouting out the timeline.
Prime rib has become one of our Christmas traditions — not because it’s fancy for the sake of fancy, but because it turns the whole day into an event. It’s the kind of meal that forces you to slow down. You season it early. You give it time. You don’t rush it. And by the time it’s ready, the house feels like Christmas.
This year I kept it simple and did it the way I like it: reverse sear. Low oven, steady temp, let the roast cook gently until it’s exactly where you want it — then crank the heat at the end to build that crust. The best part is how even it cooks. When you slice into it, it’s not a thin band of “perfect” surrounded by overdone edges. It’s that clean, consistent pink that makes you pause for a second like, “Yep. That’s the one.”
For flavor, I stuck with one seasoning: Kinder’s Prime Rib Blend. I put it on as a dry rub in the morning so it could sit and do its thing while we went about the day. When it was time to cook, I went back over it with a quick butter-and-olive-oil rub mixed with the same seasoning — kind of a “double-down” approach that builds flavor and helps that crust land right.
And in the roasting pan underneath? A little old-school move: stock with onion, carrot, and celery. It keeps the drippings happy, adds depth, and sets you up for the real closer — au jus. I strained the pan liquid, gave it a gentle simmer, then finished it with a touch of wine and butter. Nothing complicated. Just enough to make it silky and rich, the kind of thing you want to spoon over the slice even if you already told yourself you wouldn’t.
That’s the thing about holiday food. It’s not just food. It’s memory. It’s the sounds in the background, the “who wants the first cut?” moment, the plates hitting the table, and the little silence that happens right after the first bite when everyone’s too busy enjoying it to talk.
If you’ve got a tradition at your table, hang onto it. And if you’re looking for one to start, this is a pretty good place to begin.
Merry Christmas from our home to yours.